Federal shutdown threatens hikers, pandas and Lady Liberty

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Tourists may not understand how the federal government works, but could find out on Tuesday what happens when it doesn't.

The possible midnight Monday shutdown of the U.S. government amid a congressional budget battle will have serious consequences for the economy, including the more than 800,000 federal employees who will be sent home, and will jolt some of the more unusual bits of life in the United States.

Hikers headed into the wilds of Utah's Zion National Park on Monday were warned to pack up their trail mix and head back to civilization within 48 hours, said Aly Baltrus, a spokeswoman for the U.S. National Parks Service.

Closing the park, which draws 10,000 people on an average day, means ordering the guests at busy Zion Lodge to stay inside and off the trails where cougars, elk and black bear roam.

Zoo animals and the people who love them may feel the shutdown's pinch.

"Panda cams will go dark for the public," said an official at Washington's National Zoo.

Cameras used to expose the secret lives of some 40 different types of animals are operated by federal employees, whose forced furlough would cut short the stardom of octopuses, orangutans, tigers and other animals.

At the Nixon Presidential Library & Museum in Yorba Linda, California, run in part by foundation dollars, visitors would still be able to see the bed that Richard Nixon was born in, but would be blocked from viewing the bench he spent time sitting on during his college football years, said spokesman Tim Bruton.
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